Chicago Sun-Times

RESTAURANT OWNERS ‘BARELY HANGING ON,’ FEAR LOSS OF OUTDOOR DINING IN AUTUMN

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Illinois Restaurant Associatio­n President Sam Toia on Wednesday painted a bleaker-than-ever picture of a restaurant industry decimated by the stay-at-home shutdown triggered by the coronaviru­s pandemic and thrown for a loop yet again by two rounds of looting.

In a virtual address to the City Club of Chicago, Toia ticked off devastatin­g statistics telling the heartbreak­ing story of restaurant owners who are “barely hanging on” now — and will have trouble doing even that when warm weather ends and outdoor dining isn’t possible:

† Restaurant sales are down 80% across the board — even with 25% indoor capacity — and at least 20% of Illinois’ 24,000 restaurant­s “will never reopen.”

† The statewide restaurant industry has laid off or furloughed 321,000 employees, 54% of its total workforce.

† 86% of restaurant operators say they are “unlikely” to turn a profit within the next six months.

Restaurant­s suffered yet another devastatin­g blow this week when a second round of looting swept through downtown, River North and Lincoln Park. Toia said windows were “shattered,” dining rooms “left in shambles” and food and beverages stolen.

Toia also talked about the “elephant in the room”: colder weather that will take outdoor dining, which has been a life raft for restaurant­s, off the table.

“When outdoor dining is no longer doable, we could really be in trouble,” Toia said.

“We need to get to a place in Chicago — similar to the state of Illinois — where occupancy is determined by social distancing and six feet between tables, not just 25%. But we have work to do collective­ly to get these COVID numbers back down and build on the reopening progress.”

Toia said he’s lobbying hard for another round of federal help. He’s also working with the city and state on “creative” ways to make the most of outdoor dining beyond putting tables in the street and adjacent parking lots.

“Tents, heaters, bubbles, expanded footprints — whatever it takes,” Toia said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States